Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 29
India Faces Below-Average Rainfall Risk as Weak Monsoon Fuels Inflation and Rupee Pressure
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · May 29

India Faces Below-Average Rainfall Risk as Weak Monsoon Fuels Inflation and Rupee Pressure

4 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · May 29
  • Below-average rainfall is set to deepen India’s economic strains, adding to energy shortages and pressure on the rupee as a hot, dry spell hits the country.
  • Weak monsoon rains threaten food output, which can lift inflation and complicate the central bank’s task just as rural growth risks slowing.
  • Higher power demand is another channel of stress, with hotter weather likely to increase energy use and worsen existing supply concerns.
  • The weather outlook broadens India’s macro risks beyond growth, tying farm output, consumer prices, energy availability and currency stability more tightly together.
As climate change disrupts monsoons, is India facing a permanent economic threat?
With a plummeting rupee and soaring oil prices, is a deeper crisis inevitable?
Can India's Central Bank tame soaring inflation without sacrificing economic growth?